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B. Bumble & The Stingers - Nut Rocker (Ace) (1962)

Track listing:
  1. Nut Rocker 2:01
  2. Bumble Boogie 2:14
  3. School Day Blues 2:20
  4. Boogie Woogie (Pinetop's Boogie Woogie) 2:14
  5. Near You 2:01
  6. Bee Hive 3:01
  7. Caravan 2:37
  8. Nautilus 2:21
  9. Nola 2:24
  10. Rockin' On 'N' Off 2:06
  11. Mashed # 5 2:10
  12. Apple Knocker 2:35
  13. The Moon And The Sea 2:43
  14. All Of Me 2:46
  15. Dawn Cracker 2:14
  16. Scales 2:19
  17. Twelfth Street Rag 2:23
  18. Canadian Sunset 3:00
  19. Baby Mash 2:16
  20. Night Time Madness 2:19
  21. In The Mood 2:43
  22. Chicken Chow Mein 2:32
  23. Bumble Bossa Nova 2:23
  24. Canadian Sunset (ext Mix) 2:45

Notes


Producer-entrepreneur Kim Fowley not only understands the true hustle of show business, but has participated in one great rock & roll swindle after another, cutting hits out of spit, shoelaces and nothing and giving the unsuspecting world at one point or another, "Alley Oop," the Runaways, "Popsicles & Icicles" and his finest hour as a solo artist, "Animal Man," in the bargain. Not to mention B. Bumble & the Stingers. The scam this time around? Rocked-up arrangements of classical material. With the best Los Angeles rhythm section money could buy (Ernie Freeman on piano, Rene Hall on guitar and Danelectro six-string bass and Earl Palmer on drums) and thumbtacks shoved into the hammers on the piano -- when double tracked it sounded a bit like an out-of-tune harpsichord -- Fowley and Co. cranked 'em out like sausage for a couple of years until all possible sales from the idea had been sucked dry, also a major part of the scam and, still to this day, one of pop music's easiest way to gauge public taste. Anyway, think of this as the classical-piano version of the Bill Black Combo minus a horn player and you're beginning to get the big picture. Nothing manic, but politely rocking all the way. Everything arrangement-wise here is built on the sturdy wheels of their first release, "Bumble Boogie," itself being a rocked up version of Jack Fina's boogie-woogie '40s adaption of "Flight of the Bumble Bee." I count up four unissued tracks here out of 24 total with all the singles being present and accounted for with master-tape quality throughout.